Attention and randomness and resilience

Krista Tippett: Here’s something else you wrote: “The outline of our lives, like the candle’s flame, is continuously coaxed in new directions by a variety of random events that, along with our responses to them, determine our fate.” You say that we are driven to see patterns and create patterns where the patterns aren’t there. But it seems to me that you’re also presenting our responses as mattering. There is randomness, and then you talk about that even though that is true, the number of chances taken, the number of opportunities seized does make a difference. It does shift things.

Leonard Mlodinow: …little things make a big difference. And what they really do is they raise opportunities for you. Or they raise challenges. And the course of your life depends on how you react to those opportunities and challenges that the randomness presents to you. If you’re awake and paying attention, you will find that things happen. They might seem good, they might seem bad. But the important thing is how you reacted to it. (emphasis mine)

Attention to Life is the focus of Anne Doyle. Anne’s background in perceptual psychology, her belief in the directive “to love one another” and her time living abroad influence her methods of Attention to Life. Anne seeks insight, meaning, and social awareness for herself and others. All good wishes to you.

All images and text (not quotations) are copyrighted by Anne Doyle, 2008-2019; please contact for permission to use.